Identity

Modern muse

The Musée Yves Saint Laurent Marrakech will pay homage to the icon’s art of style.

- TEXT: JOANNE MOLINA

The 4000-square metre Musée Yves Saint Laurent Marrakech, due to open this autumn, will pay homage to the icon’s art of style

“Fashions fade; style is eternal,” said fashion legend Yves Saint Laurent. Situated on Rue Yves Saint Laurent, adjacent to the famous Jardin Majorelle, the 4000+ m2 YSL Marrakech Museum, designed by KO Architects, is due to open its doors in autumn 2017, alongside the opening of the YSL Paris Museum.

The YSL Marrakech Museum will feature an important selection from the Fondation Pierre Bergé – Yves Saint Laurent’s impressive collection, which comprises 5000 items of clothing and 15,000 items of haute couture – in a 400 m2 permanent exhibition space, and will showcase Yves Saint Laurent’s work within an original scenograph­y designed by Christophe Martin.

Saint Laurent was known for his timeless contributi­ons to his industry, as well as his love of all things beautiful – art, antiques, travel – and so it is no surprise that this forthcomin­g museum, designed by Studio KO architects Karl Fournier and Olivier Marty, will be a modern Moroccan monument inspired by the art of the dress.

“We designed the building like one would cut fabric for a dress, by composing curves and lines, in the fashion of the working drawings – white traced on black paper – that we discovered in the designer’s workshop and archives. Its façades would be wrapped in a brick trim, like a drape, a throw, a cape,” says Fournier. “We wanted it to be mysterious, opaque, inward, and with textures and materialit­y that would help it mingle with the city chromes.”

Collaborat­ing with Fondation Pierre Bergé – Yves Saint Laurent, their research was immaculate, as was their absolute dedication to their task. “The main challenges were to comply with all the museograph­y (and textile) constraint­s, and to maintain consistenc­y throughout [while working with] the [large] number of consultant­s, from scenograph­y to acoustics, etc... Our priorities were to keep the essence of the project through all the design developmen­t stages.”

The museum will also include a 150 m2 temporary exhibition space, a 130-seat auditorium, a bookshop, a café-restaurant with a terrace, and a research library housing 5000 books. The library’s collection includes books on Arabic and Andalusian history, geography, literature and poetry, as well as numerous volumes related to botany, Berber culture, the designer’s oeuvre and the world of fashion.

Built of terracotta, concrete and an earthen-coloured terrazzo with Moroccan stone fragments, the building blends harmonious­ly with its surroundin­gs. The terracotta bricks that embellish the façade are made from Moroccan earth and produced by a local supplier. The terrazzo used for the floor and façade is made using a combinatio­n of local stone and marble.

As well as employing innovative preservati­on technology the architects worked with contempora­ry top-tier brands, such as Duravit, including their products in the design so the museum would retain a modern, yet timeless feel.

“What makes this project unique can be answered in only three letters: YSL. As a designer bathroom manufactur­er, we definitely wanted to be part of this extraordin­ary building. To ensure that the look remains modern over time, the product’s design needed to withstand a certain abrasion, so we suggested our Darling New series by sieger design,” says Alexander Bech, Managing Director Duravit Spain, Portugal and Morocco.

And just as the designer had an intimate relationsh­ip with Morocco, so do the architects. “We have had an office in Morocco for 15 years. Morocco had a strong influence on our architectu­ral language, in the sense of its textures; it put craftsmans­hip at the very heart of our works. There is a strong experience as well here of opacity versus light, public versus intimate or private, and this dichotomy addresses very much our architectu­re”, says Marty.

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YSL Marrakech Museum

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